American pop icon Prince has died at the age of 57.
The shocking news was confirmed by the artist's publicist after reports that police were investigating a death at his home outside the northern city of Minneapolis, Minnesota.
The Carver County
Sheriff's Department told ABC News in a statement that sheriff's deputies found
the singer unresponsive Thursday morning in an elevator inside his Paisley Park
estate in Chanhassen, Minnesota after they were summoned to his suburban
compound. He was pronounced dead at 10.07 AM after their attempts to revive him
failed.
"It is with
profound sadness that I am confirming that the legendary, iconic performer
Prince Rogers Nelson has died at his Paisley Park residence this morning at the
age of 57," publicist Yvette Noel-Schure said Thursday. "There are no
further details as to the cause of death at this time."
Prince was
hospitalized last week. His private plane reportedly made an emergency landing
in Illinois following concerts in Georgia. No details were released at the time
regarding his health.
Prince was just
19 when he released his first album, For You, in 1978. In the decades
that followed, the multi-talented musician released "1999,"
"Little Red Corvette" and "Purple Rain," the title track of
his breakthrough 1984 album and movie.
He sold more than
100 million albums worldwide, won seven Grammys and picked up an Oscar for Best
Original Song score for “Purple Rain."
Prince was
inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2004.
"He rewrote
the rulebook, forging a synthesis of black funk and white rock that served as a
blueprint for cutting-edge music in the ‘80s," said a posting on the Rock
and Roll Hall of Fame website. "Prince made dance music that rocked and
rock music that had a bristling, funky backbone."
Musicians,
artists and fans took to Twitter to express their shock and sadness at the news
of Prince's death.
U.S. President
Barack Obama said in a statement, "As one of the most gifted and prolific
musicians of our time, Prince did it all. Funk. R&B. Rock and roll. He was
a virtuoso instrumentalist, a brilliant bandleader, and an electrifying
performer."
"Numb.
Stunned. This can't be real," pop star Justin Timberlake wrote.
"And just
like that ... the world lost a lot of magic. Rest in peace, Prince! Thanks for
giving us so much ..." said Katy Perry.
Filmmaker Spike
Lee posted a photo on Instagram and wrote, "I miss my brother."
Rapper MC Hammer
wrote, "I loved this man. Too soon. Can't comprehend it but it's
unfortunately true. Heaven is yours. RIP #Prince #RIPPrince."
"The
greatest live act I ever saw. Genius, poet, sexy [expletive]. RIP Prince,"
mourned actor Russell Crowe.
"Today is
the worst day ever. Prince, R.I.P., I am crying!" said singer Boy George.
Sales of Prince's music have soared since news broke of the pop star's death.
Sales of Prince's music have soared since news broke of the pop star's death.
Three of his
songs "Purple Rain,'' "Little Red Corvette,'' and "When Doves
Cry,'' surged to seventh, ninth and 10th on iTunes' Top Songs chart.
Four of his
albums — The Very Best of Prince, Purple Rain, The Hits / The
B-Sides and 1999 — had jumped to first, second, third and eighth on
iTunes' Top Albums chart by Thursday afternoon.
- Who was Prince?
Born: Prince Rogers Nelson, named after
Prince Roger Trio, a jazz band his father performed with
When: June 7, 1958
Where: Minneapolis, Minnesota
Died: April 21, at his home in Paisley
Park, a Minneapolis suburb
Aliases: Briefly used others names, including
an unpronounceable symbol O(+>, which led to him often being referred to as
"the artist formerly known as Prince"
Debut album: For You, 1978
Several hit albums and songs, including: albums 1999 and Purple Rain, which was later made into a movie, Sign O' the Times, The Black Album; songs Little Red Corvette, Kiss, Raspberry Beret, Emancipation and When Doves Cry
Career: Sold more than 100 million records,
won seven Grammy awards, inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2004,
performed during 2007 Super Bowl XLI halftime show
Known
for: His songs and
albums often created controversy for their sexually charged lyrics
edited from VOA and ABC